India  and Pakistan Tuesday concluded a 12th round of talks over a disputed  Himalayan glacier where troops have clashed intermittently since 1984  without reporting any progress.
This is a  piece of good news most Indians were waiting for. Under the UPA regime  due to its weak policies, it was feared that Siachen will be handed over  to Pakistan disregarding the deep-reservation's within the Indian  Military. 
Siachen  is one of the most strategic areas of the world, because who-ever  controls that height dominates the junction between India,Pakistan and  China. Through the passes you can come into India within 4 days and  there are no approaches which remain un-observed.In military sense it  was a master stroke of Mrs Gandhi and her generals to capture these icy  peaks.Once lost it is impossible to win, just imagine only 4000 soldiers  defend this area compared to nearly a division of Pakistani army.
Kargil  and Post Point 13620 offers a classic case study in decision making.This  post overlooks Kargil town and the Srinagar-Leh road, for long the sole  lifeline to Ladakh. Artillery observers from this post used to bring  down accurate fire on the town and the highway at will.
In May  1965, while the attention of the Pakistanis was focussed on fighting in  the Rann [ Images ] of Kutch, a Rajput battalion in a daring daytime  attack on May 17, 1965 captured the post and made the highway secure for  the first time since 1947.
But under UN pressure, it was handed back to Pakistan.
When  infiltration in the Kashmir valley began on August 9, 1965, the Indian  Army again attacked Post Point 13620 and captured it. But then came the  Tashkent agreement of January 10, 1965, and along with the strategic  Haji Pir pass, the Kargil post was again handed back to Pakistan.
Finally  in 1971, the Ladakh Scouts under the inspiring leadership of Colonel  Rinchan captured not only Point 13620, but the entire ridge during the  December war.
It is difficult to find a parallel in world history of an army capturing  a mountain post at great human cost and giving it back to the enemy not  once, but twice!
The  estranged South Asian neighbors in a joint statement said talks, which  began May 30, "enhanced understanding of each other's position" on the  Siachen glacier, the world's highest battlefield.
"Both sides presented their positions and suggestions towards the  resolution of Siachen," it said following the two-day talks between  Indian Defence Secretary Pradeep Kumar with his Pakistani counterpart  Syed Athar Ali. It added that they had agreed "to meet again at a  mutually-convenient date in Islamabad," without giving any further  details.
India in 1984 occupied key areas on Siachen, raising fears of another  all-out conflict between the neighbors, and in 1987 the two militaries  fought a fierce skirmish on the 6,300-metre (20,800-foot) high frigid  mass.
Ties between the nuclear-armed rivals, who have fought three wars since  independence from Britain in 1947, have improved over the last year  after contacts between prime ministers and other senior government  figures.
The meeting in New Delhi was part of the start-stop peace process aimed  at bringing lasting stability to South Asia, the May 31 statement said  the two countries "welcomed the ongoing dialogue process."
India broke off all contact with Pakistan in the wake of the 2008 Mumbai  attacks, which were staged by the Pakistan-based militant group  Lashkar-e-Taiba according to Indian and Western intelligence.
